Plas Madoc | |
---|---|
Housing estate | |
Leisure centre in Plas Madoc | |
Location within Wrexham | |
OS grid reference | SJ2854343532 |
Community | |
Principal area | |
Preserved county | |
Country | Wales |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | WREXHAM |
Postcode district | LL14 |
Dialling code | 01978 |
Police | North Wales |
Fire | North Wales |
Ambulance | Welsh |
UK Parliament | |
Senedd Cymru – Welsh Parliament | |
Plas Madoc is a housing estate and former electoral ward near [1] Acrefair, in the Cefn community in Wrexham County Borough, Wales. [2] It is located seven miles to the south-west of Wrexham, and contains The Land adventure playground, and a community-run [3] leisure centre with a swimming pool. [4] [5] The area is one of the most deprived areas (top 10% most deprived) in Wales, [6] [7] and the fourth most deprived LSOA in Wrexham County Borough. [8]
Plas Madoc F.C. was a football club in the area, the club dissolved in 2020.
The land that the housing estate now stands on was once part of the Chirk Estate. [9] Between 1677 and 1678, there was an ironworks including a charcoal-fired blast furnace situated on the site, although the precise location of the blast furnace has not been determined. [9] The furnace had an annual output of 300 short tons (270 tonnes) in 1711, and between 1757 and 1761 (or potentially earlier), there could have been a site for Coke smelting. [9]
The site was developed by the Lloyd family of Plas Madoc, with their descendants later establishing the Acrefair or New Ruabon Iron Works on the estate in around 1817. [9] By the early 19th century, there was a coal mining operation of the "Plas Madoc Colliery" in the area, established by the Lloyd family and their successors the Rowlands family, with a pit recorded to be present in the area by the early 19th century. [9]
The area was connected to the Trevor Basin by the Ruabon Brook Railway (by the railway's "Plasmadoc branch") in 1808, with the railway later extended to Pen-y-cae and Rhosllanerchrugog by 1821, and continued operating until the 1860s. [9] When the ironworks ceased production by 1822, it contained two blast furnaces, 18 puddling furnaces, a large double casting house and a steam engine used to power the blast furnaces. There are no surface traces of the former industrial activities.
Throughout the 19th century, other railways were established near the area, with the local Acrefair Ironworks railways lines, the Shrewsbury and Chester Railway establishing a line in 1848-54 and the Vale of Llangollen Railway established to the south of the present-day estate connecting with the Shrewsbury and Chester and onwards to Llangollen and Corwen. [9] The Shrewsbury–Chester line still operates to the east of the area, with Ruabon being the nearest operating station.
Prior to 1914, there were no major residential areas present in the area. In the 1950s, a housing estate was set up in the area, replacing the former industrial sites. [9] In 1968–70, the housing estate was expanded to designs by Mervyn Edwards, Morton and Partners of Oswestry, including a leisure centre: the first stage between 1972 and 1974 built the centre's sports hall, and the swimming pool was completed in 1977. [10] It opened as a council-run centre, and is now known as the "Plas Madoc Leisure Centre". The centre was closed and earmarked for demolition by Wrexham Council on 27 April 2014 [11] citing the cost to maintain and modernise its facilities, but was re-opened under community management on 6 December 2014. [12] [13] [14] In December 2016, the centre was again on the edge of closing due to financial hardship. [15]
In 2017, major improvement works begun on the housing estate, as part of a Wrexham Council project for the area to meet the Welsh Government's Welsh Housing Quality Standard. The project includes the fitting of cavity wall insulation, and roofs replaced on the properties that require it. Twenty-two empty properties in the Peris and Gwynant areas of the estate would be demolished as part of the project. [16] [17]
In the list of standardised Welsh place-names in Wrexham County Borough, the place is recommended to be renamed to Plas Madog () by the Welsh Language Commissioner in both English and Welsh. [18] However, "Plas Madoc" is the pre-dominant name in English and may still be used in Welsh.
Cefn Druids Association Football Club is an association football team based in the village of Cefn Mawr, Wrexham. The club reformed in the 2024–25 season to play in the North East Wales Championship. Before, the club played in the Cymru North after being relegated from the Cymru Premier in 2021–22 but withdrew ahead of the 2023–24 season due to the management and playing staff leaving over unpaid wages and a transfer ban by Fifa.
The Pontcysyllte Aqueduct is a navigable aqueduct that carries the Llangollen Canal across the River Dee in the Vale of Llangollen in northeast Wales.
Wrexham County Borough is a county borough, with city status, in the north-east of Wales. It borders the English ceremonial counties of Cheshire and Shropshire to the east and south-east respectively along the England–Wales border, Powys to the south-west, Denbighshire to the west and Flintshire to the north-west. The city of Wrexham is the administrative centre. The county borough is part of the preserved county of Clwyd.
Ruabon is a village and community in Wrexham County Borough, Wales. The name comes from Rhiw Fabon, rhiw being the Welsh word for "slope" or "hillside" and Fabon being a mutation from St Mabon, the original church name, of earlier, Celtic origin. An older English spelling, Rhuabon, can sometimes be seen.
Clwyd South was a constituency of the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom (Westminster). The constituency was created in 1997, and it elected one Member of Parliament (MP) by the first past the post method of election.
Acrefair is a village in Wrexham County Borough, north-east Wales, in the community of Cefn. It was formerly part of the ancient parish of Ruabon, and is located between Wrexham and Llangollen. It is close to the villages of Trevor, Cefn Mawr, Ruabon and Plas Madoc. The name Acrefair originates from the Welsh word for acres—acrau, or acre in the local Welsh dialect—and Mair, the Welsh name for Mary. The English meaning of Acrefair is Mary's Acres.
Ruabon railway station is a combined rail and bus interchange serving Ruabon, Wrexham County Borough, Wales. It is the second busiest station in Wrexham County Borough in terms of passenger journeys, after the mainline station, Wrexham General. It is on the Shrewsbury to Chester Line, which is part of the former Great Western Railway mainline route from London Paddington to Birkenhead Woodside which lasted until 1967.
Cefn Mawr is a village in the community of Cefn within Wrexham County Borough, Wales. Its name translates as "big ridge". The population in 2001 was 6,669, increasing to 7,051 in 2011.
Pen-y-cae is a village and community in Wrexham County Borough, Wales. The population of the community taken at the 2011 census was 3,389. It adjoins the larger village of Rhosllanerchrugog.
Henry Robertson was a Scottish mining engineer and prolific railway builder, industrialist and Liberal Party politician. He was head of Brymbo Steelworks, Wrexham. He was co-founder of Beyer-Peacock, with Charles Beyer, and Richard Peacock. His son Sir Henry Beyer Robertson was knighted by Queen Victoria for the achievements of his father.
Ruabon Druids F.C. were a football club based in the village of Ruabon near Wrexham, Wales. The club was founded in October 1872 as Ruabon Rovers F.C. by David Thomson and his brother, George, of Ruabon. In 1874 the club became Plasmadoc F.C. before changing their name to Druids F.C. in 1876.
The British Iron Company was formed in 1824 to smelt and manufacture iron and to mine ironstone, coal, etc. It was re-formed as the New British Iron Company in 1843 and liquidated itself in 1892.
The North Wales Mineral Railway was formed to carry coal and ironstone from the mineral-bearing area around Wrexham to the River Dee wharves. It was extended to run from Shrewsbury and formed part of a main line trunk route, under the title the Shrewsbury and Chester Railway. It opened in 1846 from Chester to Ruabon, and in 1848 from Ruabon to Shrewsbury. It later merged with the Great Western Railway.
Cefn is a community in Wrexham County Borough, Wales.
The Ruabon Brook Tramway was a Welsh horse-drawn tramway linking the Ruabon coalfield to the Ellesmere Canal at Froncysyllte, with a private extension into the Monsanto works at Cefn Mawr which reconnected to the main line at Trevor. The area was rich in coal, clay and minerals.
The Ruabon railway branch lines were a network of railways built to serve the mineral bearing area west of Ruabon, which contained many coal and iron deposits, as well as limestone, and a small but dense network of railways developed to handle the minerals.
The Cefn (Newbridge) Viaduct is Grade II* listed railway viaduct across the River Dee between Cefn and Chirk communities in Wrexham County Borough, Wales. The viaduct is near the villages of Cefn Mawr, Pentre and Newbridge. The viaduct forms the eastern boundary of Tŷ Mawr Country Park and is around a mile downstream of Pontcysyllte Aqueduct.
Newbridge is a village in Wrexham County Borough, Wales. The village is within the community of Cefn, to the south-east of Cefn Mawr. Newbridge is bounded to the west by the Shrewsbury–Chester railway line and the Newbridge Railway Viaduct which crosses the River Dee, which meanders to the south and east of the village. The Clwydian Range and Dee Valley AONB since 2011 borders the village to the south, as does the Wynnstay estate, and Tŷ Mawr Country Park is on the other side of the viaduct to the west.
The villages we represent are – Cefn Mawr, Rhosymedre, Plas Madoc, Newbridge, Penybryn and Acrefair